Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS FCCM September 20, 2011 at 2ET/1 CT/12 MT/11 PT Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Prevention CLABSI Supplemental Call Series.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD Johns Hopkins University
Advertisements

Eliminate Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia. What Is a Ventilator? A machine that supports breathing for those that have lost the ability to breathe Short.
© The Johns Hopkins University and The Johns Hopkins Health System Corporation, 2011 Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality CUSP for Safe Surgery:
Reducing Ventilator Associated Pneumonia in Adults Intensive Care Units Confidential: Quality Improvement Material.
How We Zapped VAP During the past six years, our Multidisciplinary Pneumonia Team has worked to reduce Ventilator Associated Pneumonia (VAP). Through these.
OUR LADY OF LOURDES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Binghamton, New York Reducing Complications From Ventilators in ICU: Ventilator Associated Pneumonia (VAP)
University of DundeeSchool of Medicine Best practice in managing pneumonia: Scottish National Audit Project – Community Acquired Pneumonia (SNAP-CAP) Peter.
The Importance of Clinical Oral Care
1 Surgical Unit-Based Safety Program Proposed Resources for Partnership for Patients Terri Conner, Ph.D. Nybeck Analytics Partnership for Patients.
Preventing VAP - evidence for a care bundle. VAP Incidence ~ % ventilated patients 7-15 / 1000 ventilator days Atributable mortality of 0-50% Atributable.
Research and analysis by Avalere Health Hospitals Demonstrate Commitment to Quality Improvement October 2012.
CLABSI: Working Toward Zero Trinity Regional Health System Infection Prevention and Control Presented by: Patricia Herath, BSN, RNC Infection Preventionist.
University of Rochester Strong Health
CSTS: The Cardiovascular Surgical Translational Study Senior Leadership of Quality and Safety Initiatives in Health Care Peter J. Pronovost, MD, PhD The.
Oral Care for Patients at Risk for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Issued April 2010.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI The Science of Improving Patient Safety.
The Science of Improving Patient Safety On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI 1 Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS Johns Hopkins University Quality and Safety Research Group.
VAP Intervention Information
Patient- and Family-Centered Care — What is it? Patient- and family- centered care is working with, rather than doing to or for.
The Cardiac Surgery Translational Study (“CSTS”) The Quality And Safety Research Group Data We Can Count On Lisa H. Lubomski, PhD April 8, 2011 Immersion.
NICU CLABSI Affinity Group Meeting May 9, 2012
Clinical Uses and Ramifications of VAE Data
Is healthcare getting safer ? The challenge of measurement Charles Vincent Department of Psychology & Oxford Academic Health Science Network.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI Overview of STOP-BSI Program.
CUSP 4 MVP – VAP Improving Care for Mechanically Ventilated Patients Strategies for Collecting and Entering Early Mobility ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT.
CUSP 4 MVP – VAP Improving Care for Mechanically Ventilated Patients Data Webinar 5 Defining the Early Mobility Measures ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT.
Toward Eliminating Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections.
The Cardiac Surgery Translational Study (“CSTS”) The Quality And Safety Research Group Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Prevention Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS.
Improving ICU Care Through Teamwork
Comparative Effectiveness Grant Toward Eliminating Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections.
CUSP 4 MVP – VAP Improving Care for Mechanically Ventilated Patients Content 1: Science of Safety & Identifying Defects ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI Nurse Empowerment.
© The Johns Hopkins University and The Johns Hopkins Health System Corporation, 2011 VAP Prevention Bundle: Evidence Review for Oral Care and Subglottic.
Who We Are ~Where We are Going. Slide 2 Workshop Objectives Describe the purpose and vision of the ICU Safe Care Initiative/Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety.
The Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Unit-based Patient Safety Program (CUSP) Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD, Johns Hopkins Univeristy.
The Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP)
Patient Hand-Offs Sheri S. Crow, MD, MS Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Critical Care Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN.
Comprehensive Unit based Patient Safety Program Deepa Jose,RN,CCRN.
Specialised Geriatric Services Heather Gilley Sharon Straus.
ICU Safe Care Initiative: Comprehensive Unit-Based Safety Program 1.
CUSP 4 MVP – VAP Improving Care for Mechanically Ventilated Patients Revisiting Science of Safety & Identifying Defects ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT.
Disclosures  Nothing to disclose  No discussion of “off-label” use of medications.
© The Johns Hopkins University and The Johns Hopkins Health System Corporation, 2011 Taking Patient Safety to the Next Level Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD 1.
ICU Safe Care Initiative/CUSP October 5, :00 am – 3:30 pm.
Supporting NHS Wales to Deliver World Class Healthcare All Wales Stroke Services Improvement Collaborative Learning Session One 21 st October 2009.
Translating Evidence into Practice
Small and Rural Critical Access Hospitals July 19, 2011.
Small Rural/CAH Learning Community Meeting May 23, 2012 Denise Flook, RN, MPH, CIC HAI Collaborative Lead Vice President, Infection Prevention/Staff Engagement.
William B. Munier, MD Director, Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality National Advisory Council.
Staff Safety Assessment 1. Learning Objectives To understand Step 2 of CUSP:Identify Defects To understand how to Implement the Staff Safety Assessment.
PREVENTION Kaplan University Capstone NU499 VENTILATOR – ASSOCIATED PNEUMONIA VAP PREVENTION at Sparks Regional Medical Center.
VAP Rates – Critical Care January 1, 2010 – December 31, 2010.
The Science of Improving Patient Safety On the CUSP: Stop CAUTI 1 Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS Johns Hopkins University Quality and Safety Research Group.
© 2009 On the CUSP: STOP BSI Senior Leadership of Quality and Safety Initiatives in Health Care.
Yousef I. Aljeesh, PhD, RN Said Abusalem, PhD, RN Naeem Alkariri, MSN, RN John A. Myers, PhD, MSPH Fawwaz Alaloul, PhD, RN Staff Developed IP Program Increases.
Update in Critical Care Medicine Ann Intern Med 2007;147:
The AHRQ Safety Program for Improving Antibiotic Use
Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Alan Willson 17 November 2010
An Intervention to Learn from Mistakes and Improve Safety Culture
The AHRQ Safety Program for Improving Antibiotic Use
Staff Safety Assessment
Staff Safety Assessment
ICU Safe Care Initiative/CUSP November 16, :30 am – 3:30 pm
VP for Patient Safety and Quality
Meeting Objectives Build skills among care team members that will improve teamwork, communication, and create a patient safety culture in your unit Hear.
MA ICU Safe Care Initiative: Comprehensive Unit Based Safety Program (CUSP) 2010.
Unit-Based Safety Program (CUSP)
Nursing Sensitive Indicator: RN Hours Per Patient Day (NHPPD)
Presentation transcript:

Sean Berenholtz, MD MHS FCCM September 20, 2011 at 2ET/1 CT/12 MT/11 PT Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Prevention CLABSI Supplemental Call Series

Slide 2 Your Feedback is Important

Slide 3 Learning Objectives To describe the morbidity and mortality associated with Ventilator Associated Pneumonia To understand the framework used to achieve substantial and sustained reductions in VAP as part of the Michigan Keystone ICU program To outline next steps towards implementing VAP prevention efforts

Slide 4 Impact of VAP 10-20% of ventilated patients Common HAI – Median rate per 1000 vent day – 250,000 infections per year Most lethal HAI – Mortality likely exceeds 10% – Up to 36,000 deaths per year Cost per episode: $23,000 Safdar CCM 2005, Kollef Chest 2005, Perencevich ICHE 2007, Public Health Rep

Slide 5 Healthcare Associated Pneumonia Prevention CDC/HICPAC: Guidelines for the Prevention of Healthcare Associated Pneumonia; Canadian Critical Care Trials Group1: Comprehensive evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for ventilator- associated pneumonia: Prevention. Journal of Critical Care; SHEA/IDSA: Strategies to Prevent Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Acute Care Hospitals; 2008.

Slide 6 How Can These Errors Happen? People are fallible Medicine is still treated as an art, not science Need to view the delivery of healthcare as a science Need systems that catch mistakes before they reach the patient

Slide 7 To Improve Reliability Standardize what is done, when it is done – Reduce complexity Create independent checks for key processes – How often do we do what we should Learn from defects – How often do we learn from defects Health Services Research 2006; Circulation 2009;119:

Slide 8 Improving Care for Ventilated Patients Semirecumbant positioning Peptic ulcer disease and DVT prophylaxis Appropriate sedation Daily assessment of readiness to extubate Oral care with antiseptics Minimize contamination of equipment

Slide 9 Translating Evidence into Practice Pronovost, Berenholtz, Needham. BMJ 2008

Slide 10 Engage – Partner with infection preventionists, – Post performance, – Tell stories of harm Educate – Reviewed evidence on conference calls, – One-page fact sheets, – Slides for teams Improving Care for Ventilated Patients

Slide 11 Improving Care for Ventilated Patients Decrease complexity / create redundancy – Standardized order sets and protocols – Daily goals checklist Other independent redundancies – Nursing and families – Are patients receiving the prevention they should?

Slide 12 Sample Daily Goals J Crit Care 2003;18(2):71-75

Slide 13 Evaluate VAP – Standardized CDC NHSN definitions for VAP – VAP definition varies; Did not change definition Ventilator Bundle Process Measures – Collected by the ICU teams; daily cross-sectional sample – Standardized definitions and data collection forms – Limited number of trained data collectors – After first quarter of daily data collection, teams were allowed to collect process measures one to two days/week (min of 15 vent pts/mo) to minimize burden. Improving Care for Ventilated Patients

Slide 14 Results 124 of 127 ICUs submitted VAP data – 12 ICUs started after funding ended 112 ICUs, 72 hospitals included in analysis 3228 ICU months and 550,800 vent days 10% quarters without complete data – 4% missing data; 6% stopped submitting data Sensitivity analysis yielded similar results Results reported through months post- implementation

Slide 15 Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2011;32(4): Michigan Keystone ICU

Slide 16 Michigan Keystone ICU (n= Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2011;32(4):

Slide 17 Limitations Lack of concurrent control group – Temporal changes, other interventions Did not evaluate accuracy of VAP diagnosis – All hospitals reported using CDC definitions – Used existing hospital infrastructure Can not evaluate importance of individual therapies in ventilator bundle Can not evaluate importance of other intervention Focus on ventilator care vs VAP prevention

Slide 18 Strengths Largest cohort to date Significant and sustained VAP reductions Focus on system of care Engagement of local interdisciplinary teams to assume ownership Centralized support for technical work Local adaptation of intervention Culture improvement and social networking among ICUs

Slide 19 Summary VAP is most lethal HAI; majority are preventable Effective interventions to prevent VAP are known; patients are not receiving the care they should Focus on systems to ensure patients receive the therapies they ought to

Slide 20 Next Steps Keystone ICU VAP project focused on ‘Ventilator Bundle’ Developing ‘VAP prevention bundle ’ – Funded by NIH/NHLBI – Delphi process led by RAND researcher

Slide 21 European Care Bundle for VAP Prevention Intensive Care Med 2010;36:

Slide 22 Your Feedback is Important